At 02:50 PM 4/7/2005 +0800, Yawar Amin wrote:
[...]
 Here's what I think: Debian is excellent, but ... outdated. And
if you want to be cautious and not try to do full upgrades from the
'net for fear of breaking something, then you're stuck with older
stuff. (Sorry, Ray! I had to get that out. I myself use MEPIS, which
is Debian-based. And I `broke' it by doing a dist-upgrade before first
installing all the stuff I like.)

You should not feel the need to apologize for an honest opinion, at least not one that you express politely (as you do in this instance). That said, I do feel the need to respond with a bit of a clarification.


Most Debian users agree, I think, that the "stable" Debian distro (currently Woody) tends to be extremely out of date (except for security-related fixes, where the maintanance team is very good). Some would go so far as to say that it is so outdated that it is a joke, and I can't really disagree with that.

But Debian also maintains a "testing" distro (Sarge) and an "unstable" distro (Sid), both of which are considerably closer to current. Here, on any system that requires really up to date stuff ... in practice, everything except my router ... I always use Sid. I occasionally experience transient problems, as package updatings get out of sync ... especially a problem with major moves by shared libraries ... but that is probably an inevitable price of staying close to current. I've never "broken" a Debian system for more than a day or two, until the packages got back in sync.

I haven't used any distro other than Debian in so long that I no longer know how they compare in the balance of currency and stability with Sid.

I don't know what "Debian-based" distros use, since I've not used any of them ... I've never even heard of MEPIS ... so I can neither encourage nor discourage their use. I just note that "Debian-based" != "Debian".

Finally, due to the detection and correction of security-related problems, I'd suggest that nobody ... at least nobody running a system that has any sort of Internet connection ... can escape the need to do regular updates of his or her system. In practice, I find "full upgrades" easier to do than security upgrades of specific packages ... but the need, and the attendant risks of compatibility problems, is present in EVERY distro.


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